25 Amazing Things About The Phantom Menace (2024)

This weekend, The Phantom Menace turns 25—and while we’ve celebrated the ways the film brought so much to Star Wars in the past, for its 25th anniversary we wanted to look back at a few different things, big and small, that make Phantom Menace so great all these years later, whether you caught it on the big screen again this month or are ready to watch it at home to mark the occasion.

Every Padmé Costume Change

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Every look, a serve. Every change, effortless. She’s giving Handmaiden, she’s giving Sad Queen, she’s giving Glad Queen, she’s giving woman of the people, she’s giving battle dress, she’s giving “I need to yell about the downfall of democracy, but make it fashion.” She’s giving like 15 other things because Padmé has so many looks in this movie and they’re all incredible. Gowns, beautiful gowns, sincerely.

Battle Droids

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Clone Wars really did a number on the B-1 Battle Droid’s reputation, transforming the Trade Federation’s robot hordes into effectively goofy comic relief—and even before then, they’re a little silly in Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith. But in Phantom Menace they really are, for the most part, a captivating, menacing threat. The design is so good, and unlike anything we’d seen from Star Wars droid design before—a really cool example of Lucas wanting to use new technologies to push designs further than what came before.

Aurra Sing, Cameo Queen

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Star Wars is filled with blink-and-you’ll-miss-it character designs that are on screen for a shot or two, but so immediately compelling you want to know more about them. In Phantom Menace, that is Aurra Sing, who shows up to watch the Boonta Eve Podrace for approximately five seconds—and is just so striking in her presence that, thank god, we immediately got to see her shine in comics and expanded material, and eventually get to take on a real life of her own in the Clone Wars animated series (we don’t talk about her unfortunately revealed fate in Solo here, thank you).

All that from about three seconds of on-screen existence? That’s Star Wars, right there.

The Naboo N-1 Starfighter

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Star Wars is filled with excellent Starfighter design. It’s rare for a combat fighter to not be one of the coolest looking things you’ve ever seen—even the A-Wing, which correct people believe sucks ass, looks cool as hell. But the Naboo N-1 is just an absolute beaut of a design.

Once again, like so much of the design in Phantom Menace, it feels Star Wars while being unlike anything we’d seen in this universe before, and its visual identity tells us so much about the Naboo and their worldview the second you lay eyes on it. The bold yellow, the smooth curves, the chrome sheen… Phantom Menace is jam packed with absolutely incredible costume and mechanical and environment design, but this sits at the peak of peaks.

Podracing

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Star Wars loves its rhyming poetry, so there’s something wonderful about Anakin and Luke sharing a past time in incredibly reckless vehicle joyrides. Luke might have been scoring bullseyes on womp rats in Beggar’s Canyon, but his dad was… participating in high-velocity death races on the regular? Oh, hell yes.

The remarkable poetry of it all aside, the Boonta Eve Classic is up there as one of the all-time Star Wars moments. The bounty of alien racers, the incredible designs of these spindly, rickety death traps zooming around at a million miles an hour, it’s still so fun and energetic to watch all these years later. And the sound of it all! Speaking of…

The Sound Design

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I have to put “Sound Design” as one item on this list, because if wasn’t, 90% of this list would be me trying to find the onomatopoeia for practically every noise in this movie. The thrum of podrace engines, the clack of droideka feet, the little wibble Gungan energy shields make under fire, and yes, the Naboo blasters that go “bwah!”.

Especially the Naboo blasters that go “bwah!”.

Sio Bibble

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The master of figuring out the one thing that a communications disruption could mean, Oliver Ford Davies doesn’t get much to do in Phantom Menace, but he sells the hell out of every little moment. Also, I cannot stress enough, the man that we have to watch over holocomms imply—under duress as a lie or otherwise—that the Trade Federation are rounding up the Naboo in camps and slaughtering them in untold numbers is called Sio Bibble. Doing all that with a straight face, remarkable.

Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan’s Little Force Speed Dash

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Part of the premise of the prequels is getting to see Jedi at the apex of their influence and power (well… we’ll get to that later), which means getting to see them fight in ways we could never see Luke, Vader, and Obi-Wan do in the original films, and getting to see them use the Force in similar ways. But the insanely brief moment Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon use a Force dash like they’re video game characters to leg it from the Droidekas on the Trade Federation command ship? Insane. It looks like a wild editing flub, as a mystical super power. And despite being insanely useful it’s never used in the film or the rest of the prequel trilogy again?

Hilariously Inefficient Droid Repair

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Charting the technological evolution of Star Wars’ universe is a fraught endeavor at the best of times, but the thought that the Naboo haven’t figured out a way to repair ships in flight that doesn’t involve sending a little army of Astromech droids out to go work on fixing parts while under blaster fire is as hilarious as it is horrifying.

Like, we know R2-D2 is going to be fine, because he’s R2-D2, but he has to work literally under fire, while watching his fellow astros just get blown away by cannon fire? And his reward as seemingly the sole survivor of the repair job is Padmé saying “thanks, get this dirty little droid cleaned up please.” Star Wars’ relationship to droid personhood continues to be a hot mess.

Jar Jar Committing to the Bit

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It became en vogue for a good while after Phantom Menace to rag on Jar Jar as too outlandish and silly a character for Star Wars, but while the movie plays up that side of him a lot, Jar Jar is also frequently just actually a solidly funny character. The way he constantly sarcastically rags on Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan’s recklessness is fascinating little bit of character work—in that he’s both somehow the realist of their situation, but also a bit of a selfish coward, which is an interesting place to put your comedy relief character—but also, his repeated attempts to make “How wude” happen are just great. He’s a Gungan who knows when he’s on to a good bit, and he sticks to it.

Bendy Hologram Palpatine

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The prequels have been endlessly memed upon, but there’s something in the stark absurdity of the little wibble in Palpatine’s holographic display as communications on Naboo begin to go offline being one of them that’s remarkably funny. Look at his big chest! That’s the future Emperor of the Galactic Empire! Delightful.

Naboo and Coruscant’s Glimmering Aesthetic

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Part of what made the original Star Wars such a remarkable film from a design standpoint was its approach to a rugged, “lived-in” sensibility for its sets and props. Everything is a little grimy, even the stark sheen of the Death Star’s hallways are marked with shoe scuffs and little bits of carbon scoring, everything looks like it’s been used by people for years and years before it appears in a scene. So it’s fascinating to get that aesthetic in Phantom Menace’s middle-act on Tatooine, and contrast it with the art-deco cleanliness of Naboo and Coruscant sandwiched around it.

Again, it’s Star Wars while not looking like the Star Wars we know, something additive to the universe’s visual language that speaks to the state of the galaxy at this point in the timeline. Theed and Coruscant are beautiful for very different reasons—the elaborate palatial hallways of Theed contrasted with the technological bustle of Coruscanti air traffic—but we learn so much about the Republic in the simple fact that they’re both so spartan and clean compared to the familiarity of Tatooine.

Gasgano

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Once again, the Podrace scene is just jam packed with banger after banger of alien designs among the racers. But a special shoutout has to go to Gasgano, who is both a) a delightful looking multi-armed weirdo, and b) the unsung second-place finisher of the Boonta Eve Classic, one of the few handfuls of racers we don’t see explosively crash out along the way. Good for you, you little freak.

Padmé’s Throne Just Being Packed With Blaster Pistols

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Everything about the visual identity of the Naboo is meant to evoke this idea of a pacifist people, a society that prioritizes trade and cultural exchange over military might. When we do see military capability, it’s couched in this ornate, sleek design language—we already mentioned the starfighters, but everything from the immaculate wood-handled blasters to the uniforms of Theed security, to the battledress worn by Padmé and her handmaidens, all informs our view of Naboo society.

Which is why it’s incredibly funny when a seemingly captured Padmé turns the tables on Nute Gunray by popping over to her throne and activating an opening panel in one of its arm rests… to reveal like, four or five holdout pistols just hidden in there, which she rapidly tosses around to the captured guards to take out the gathered Battle droids and make Nute Gunray and Rune Haako the actual prisoners. Sure they knew things were getting tense with the blockade prior to the Trade Federation’s invasion, but how long has Padmé had those hidden there? And why?

Darth Maul’s Extra AF Second Blade Reveal

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How do you make a lightsaber cooler? You strap a second lightsaber to it. And Darth Maul knows he looks cool with that remarkable little flourish he offers when he readies to fight Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon—twirling his hilt out in front of him, igniting one end… and then holding the beat just long enough that when he fires up the second blade it hits you that he’s about to thrown the hell down. An immaculate serve.

Pit Droids

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Remember how I said Battle Droids eventually became Funny Little Guys in Star Wars after Phantom Menace? They didn’t need to be that in this movie, because it already had Funny Little Guys in the Pit Droids! A great design, very funny, a similarly unintentionally dark metacommentary on droid sentience and treatment after we watch one get chewed out by a podracer engine, they’re great. Well, except for the poor one that gets put through that engine, of course.

The Jedi Order Already Being Kind of Terrible

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It’s a very brave choice on the prequels’ part that we return to an era of Jedi prominence—even as we brace for their undoing over the course of the trilogy—unseen onscreen in Star Wars and our introduction to them is that, basically, they’re all a little bit awful? Sure, yes, they swing lightsabers well, but you get some really telling moments about just how even at this point the Jedi as an institution are in a state of moral rot. The way the Jedi Council so casually dismisses Qui-Gon’s concerns and Anakin’s potentiality speaks to this hubris of course, but a special shoutout has to go to Qui-Gon himself, and the absolute gutwrenching look in Liam Neeson’s eyes when he has to stare Anakin in the face and tell him his Jedi hero isn’t on Tatooine to free slaves, but settle a trade dispute for a teen Queen who walks around in gowns worth more than anything the kid has ever seen in his life.

These are the heroes of myth and legend that Luke strived to be like? That we’ve had mythologized for decades after the original trilogy ended? These guys?

The Gungan Army’s Boomas

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In part yet another sound design win here—the bounce they make as they roll around, paired with the electrical thrum of the way they “burst” over the Trade Federation’s infantry and tanks, is just so good. But they’re also just incredibly aesthetically pleasing—an interesting cultural link between the Gungans and the Naboo and how they both prioritize design and artistry across their society. That, and they kind of look like forbidden gummy candies that come in either hand grenade or giant boulder sizes.

Ray Shields

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Shielding as a concept is far from new to Star Wars—they’re all over the starship sequences in the original trilogy—but we didn’t really see them. They were represented by the flashes of dissipating blaster fire, whereas in Phantom Menace, we actually get to see shielding in action in a really interesting visual way—from the spherical bubbles that protect the Droidekas as they unleash volleys at Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan, to the massive domes protecting the Gungan army from artillery fire, making shielding a tangible, visual thing we get to see is a really neat aesthetic choice (and again, paired with some really nifty sound design! This movie sounds so good!!!).

Palpatine’s Effortless sh*t-Stirring

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We the audience know Palpatine’s up to no good, because he shows up and his name is goddamn Palpatine, but Ian McDiarmid plays an incredible little performance when Palpatine’s in his Senatorial guise. We get all the classic Emperor stuff in the Lord Sidious sequences, but the masterful way he lays out the state of things on Coruscant to Padmé, and weaves her into his plans to depose Chancellor Valorum, is played to a slimy perfection. He’s not cackling and outwardly villainous, but there’s a smooth, sinister charm to Palpatine in Phantom Menace that’s really effective.

The Politicking

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Speaking of: yes, a controversial statement at the time of release—and the years after of people ragging that our first glimpse of the prequel saga was an opening crawl talking about taxation—but it’s good to see the kind of political quagmire the Republic was! It’s brief in the film, for all the complaining about it, but it’s a really effective way to immediately show us how this system has become untenable—and ripe for someone like Palpatine to exploit its powers for his own good. The decline of empire (not capital E galactic, in this case) is just as interesting as lightsaber fights, actually.

Shmi Skywalker

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Pernilla August is only in Phantom Menace for its middle act on Tatooine, but even with the little she has, she turns in an incredibly touching performance as Anakin’s mother. The way she has to try and play between the unease of not knowing what her son is capable of, to the mirrored joy and despair of Qui-Gon earning his freedom but not hers, Shmi is a character that has to really land to make Anakin’s arc across the prequels work at its fundamental core—the emotional attachment that defines everything about Anakin’s sense of justice and his ethos as he grows into the troubled young man of the later films. And it lands because of August’s understated performance.

The Duel of the Fates (The Soundtrack)

Duel of the Fates

It’s the anthem of the prequels. How could it not be called out here? John Williams’ eventual body of work on the prequel trilogy gives us a ton of great themes and suites, but nothing will ever compare to hearing that chorus bellow for the first time—a sound, in and of itself, was not something we’d associated with part of Star Wars’ soundscape before. Now, it’s impossible to imagine Star Wars music without it.

The Duel of the Fates (The Fight)

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While the soundtrack definitely plays a huge part of why Obi-Wan, Qui-Gon, and Maul’s duel through Theed’s power generators works, the fight itself—a thing that has been nitpicked on over and over in the years since—is still a fabulous bit of spectacle. Getting to see Force users fight like this was unlike anything the action of the original trilogy could give—the twirls, the leaps, even the fact that it’s a trio of combatants for the most part, instead of a one-on-one duel. Less of a clash of swords and more of a dance, it still sets a high standard to this day for Star Wars lightsaber fights.

The Naboo Disco Peace Ball

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Once again: the peoples of Naboo love a shiny ball. A wonderful symbol of their renewed commonality! Brian Blessed gets to yell “PEACE” as he raises the disco ball to the sky! It’s so bright!

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25 Amazing Things About The Phantom Menace (2024)

FAQs

What is the most unknown Star Wars fact? ›

Star Wars Facts: 21 Things You Didn't Know
  • Yoda is the Sanskrit word for 'warrior' ...
  • Harrison Ford's casting as Han Solo was a happy accident. ...
  • James Earl Jones recorded all his Darth Vader lines in a single day. ...
  • Warwick Davis played Wicket because R2-D2 got food poisoning. ...
  • Yoda was originally going to be played by a monkey.

What does it say at the beginning of Phantom Menace? ›

Opening crawl: "Turmoil has engulfed the Galactic Republic. The taxation of trade routes to outlying star system is in dispute.

Are you an angel anakin line? ›

Anakin: An angel. I've heard the deep space pilots talk about them. They live on the moons of Iego, I think. They're the most beautiful creatures in the universe.

What is good about phantom menace? ›

While The Phantom Menace feels closest to the original trilogy, it also establishes an entirely new version of the galaxy we thought we knew, relishing in unfurling a beautiful galactic era un-crushed by the boot of the Empire, with bountiful Jedi and a lavish Republic and flourishing worlds.

Who is the most feared person in Star Wars? ›

Star Wars villains strike fear into the hearts of fans, from the ruthless Grand Moff Tarkin to the vengeful and violent Darth Maul. The Grand Inquisitor and Mother Talzin are equally terrifying with their relentless pursuit and dark powers.

What is the most disturbing thing in Star Wars? ›

The 8 most disturbing moments in 'Star Wars'
  1. Something Alive in Here (Star Wars: A New Hope) ...
  2. Undercover Jedi (Star Wars: The Clone Wars) ...
  3. Order 66 (Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith) ...
  4. Luke's Vision (Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back) ...
  5. Boba's Nose Lizard (The Book of Boba Fett) ...
  6. Exegol (Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker)
Jun 1, 2022

Why is it called Phantom Menace? ›

Lucas later revealed that the Phantom Menace title was a reference to Palpatine hiding his true identity as an evil Sith Lord behind the facade of a well-intentioned public servant.

Did Darth Maul say anything in The Phantom Menace? ›

Yes, at least once he speaks to Sideous and says “Yes, my Master” but other than that he doesn't say much. He was a sith assassin meant to be seen and feared but not necessarily heard. Because he was a phantom menace.

What is Anakin's motto? ›

Anakin Skywalker: Don't lecture me, Obi-Wan! I see through the lies of the Jedi. I do not fear the dark side as you do. I have brought peace, freedom, justice, and security to my new Empire!

What is Anakin's secret code? ›

Rushing to find out the truth about Fives and what's happening to the clones, Ahsoka gets help from her old master to unlock a sealed file from Rex. “Try Anakin's passcode. 8-1-0-8.” These aren't just random numbers — you probably guessed that but were too panicked to figure out what their significance might be.

Why people don t like phantom menace? ›

It looks bad, it sounds bad(kudos to the actors who make this dialouge sound good) and the best aspects are too brief. The Phantom Menace has been lapidated by audiences and its kind of understandable: passionate Star Wars fans can look past the flaws but to the average viewer it can be very offputting.

What is the most child friendly Star Wars? ›

  • The Phantom Menace: Now this is Star Wars for youngsters!
  • Disney-era Star Wars like The Force Awakens offer a diverse set of heroes for kids to identify with.
  • Barbequed Anakin will probably haunt your children's dreams. ...
  • LEGO Star Wars offers a fun, bite-sized approach to the story you love.
Sep 1, 2023

What is the actual plot of The Phantom Menace? ›

The film follows the Jedi Master Qui-Gon Jinn and his apprentice Obi-Wan Kenobi, who escort and protect Queen Amidala in traveling from the planet Naboo to the planet Coruscant in the hope of finding a peaceful end to a large-scale interplanetary trade dispute.

What is the rarest Star Wars creature? ›

Xidelphiad. The rarest species on this list is by far the Xidelphiad, a sentient species who only has one appearance in all of Star Wars canon, that being the book Star Wars Propaganda: A History Of Persuasive Art In The Galaxy.

What is the most unlikely Jedi? ›

Tchuukthai. As far as unlikely Jedi Masters go, Thon the Tchuukthai is one of the most unconventional.

What are the unknown worlds Star Wars? ›

At the time of the Galactic Civil War, the Unknown Regions were regarded as an unexplored region that was separated from the galaxy by a labyrinth of solar storms, rogue magnetospheres, black holes, gravity wells, and things far stranger. Strange creatures were known to inhabit the void.

Who is the hidden one in Star Wars? ›

Hazz became the sect's first leader, known as "hu'aac-du'ul-staranjan"—or simply the Hidden One—and was given absolute rule over the sect. The sect's culture revolved around an individual Baran Do Sage holding a dying ceremony before traveling to the system of caverns that was home to the sect.

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